• Jo Miran@lemmy.ml
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    6 hours ago

    Before blaming AI, blame companies who decided to outsource as much as possible to the lowest priced options, regardless of quality. Once those options became “cost prohibitive” (read, not cheap enough to satisfy shareholders), only then did the rush to develop AI truly begin.

      • moleverine@lemmy.world
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        46 minutes ago

        The race depicted are notoriously dumb and only achieved space travel by stealing the technology. Don’t think about it too much or you’ll see all the holes in that idea.

  • Thoralf Will@discuss.tchncs.de
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    11 hours ago

    I have yet to see any so called „AI“ that is even remotely able to replace true „knowledge workers“.

    LLM can be helpful. But I do not believe that I will live to see them replace humans on more than an low to average level.

    • theneverfox@pawb.social
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      1 hour ago

      What do you mean? Any AI can replace any knowledge worker. You just fire the worker and say AI will do it, easy

      Look around… Running a corporation isn’t about doing things or making things anymore, it’s about the stock price. And consulting companies have convinced investors that layoffs are so hot and rich

      If you haven’t noticed, the quality of everything has been plummeting since COVID. They don’t care about tomorrow problems, just extracting as much wealth as they can before it all comes crashing down

    • chobeat@lemmy.mlOP
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      10 hours ago

      Here “replace” doesn’t mean “being able to do the same job”. It means you get fired. Automation in most fields never even tried to get close to a level of quality comparable to what a human can do, but it was enough to displace a majority of workers.

      The author is a machine learning engineer, so he’s perfectly aware of the limits of whatever is called AI. The point is to make those limits irrelevant by lowering the expected level of quality, as it happened with textile, food, and so on.

    • andallthat@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      The article makes a good point that it’s less about replacing a knowledge worker completely and more industrializing what some categories of knowledge workers do.

      Can one professional create a video with AI in a matter of hours instead of it taking days and needing actors, script writers and professional equipment? Apparently yes. And AI can even translate it in multiple languages without translators and voice actors.

      Are they “great” videos? Probably not. Good enough and cheap enough for several uses? Probably yes.

      Same for programming. The completely independent AI coder doesn’t exist and many are starting to doubt that it ever will, with the current technology. But if GenAI can speed up development, even not super-significantly but to the point that it takes maybe 8 developers to do the work of 10, that is a 20% drop in demand for developers, which puts downward pressure on salaries too.

      It’s like in agriculture. It’s not like technology produced completely automated ways to plow fields or harvest crops. But one guy with a tractor can now work one field in a few hours by himself.

      With AI all this is mostly hypothetical, in the sense that OpenAI and co are all still burning money and resources at a pace that looks hard to sustain (let alone grow) and it’s unclear what the cost to the consumers will be like, when the dust settles and these companies will need to make a profit.

      But still, when we’re laughing at all the failed attempts to make AI truly autonomous in many domains we might be missing the point

      • richmondez@lemdro.id
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        7 hours ago

        I think you hit the nail on the head where this is heading by questioning the final costs. Currently “AI” development is burning through insane piles of money and energy and no one is really paying a significant cost to use it… It’s a loss leader at the moment but it’s unclear if there are many uses for it if it were to be full price. Is it going to be another voice assistant situation where people like usi g it but it’s actually really hard to make any money off it directly?

      • Jayjader@jlai.lu
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        5 hours ago

        Part of the problem is also that, while an acre of land can feed a family of 4, there’s no way to generate enough surplus from that single acre to be able to afford a tractor in the first place. So the tractor creates the need for much larger farm plots being owned by a single person, which way up all the supposed extra free time the automation/mechanized tool was supposed to bring.

        In the end, less people can work the land to sustain themselves and the only people better off are those who already had more than enough to go buy.

    • anamethatisnt@sopuli.xyz
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      11 hours ago

      Yeah, if the user can’t verify the truthfulness of the LLM generated text then it has no use as it can’t be trusted.
      I’d say the thing LLM is best at for me is giving me a starting point, in the same way that it is easier to fix someone else’s writing than it is to write something from a blank slate. Oh and copilot is generally up to date on where in Microsoft 365 Admin you find an option right now, compared to all the outdated official and unofficial guides out there.